This page is about the meanings of the acronym/abbreviation/shorthand VVV in the International field in general and in the Latin terminology in particular.

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Definition

VVV was a magazine devoted to the dissemination of Surrealism published in New York City from 1942 through 1944.
Only four issues of VVV were published. However, it provided an outlet for European Surrealist artists, who were displaced from their home countries by World War II, to communicate with American artists.
VVV was the product of leading Surrealists. The magazine was edited by David Hare in collaboration with Marcel Duchamp, André Breton, and Max Ernst. VVV's editorial board also enlisted a number of associated thinkers and artists, including Aimé Césaire, Philip Lamantia, and Robert Motherwell. Each edition focused on "poetry, plastic arts, anthropology, sociology, psychology," and was lavishly illustrated by Surrealist artists, including Giorgio de Chirico, Roberto Matta and Yves Tanguy.
The magazine was experimental in format, as well as, in content. VVV included fold-out pages, sheets of different sizes and paper stock, and bold typography and color. The second magazine featured a "readymade" by Duchamp as the back cover which was a cutout female figure "imprisoned" by a piece of actual chicken wire.